Agenda and minutes

Venue: Council Chamber Blackdown House

Contact: Sarah Jenkins  01395 517406 email;  sjenkins@eastdevon.gov.uk

Media

Items
No. Item

54.

Public speaking

Information on public speaking is available online

 

Minutes:

There were no members of the public registered to speak.

 

55.

Minutes of the previous meeting pdf icon PDF 176 KB

Minutes:

The minutes of the meeting held on 3 November 2022 were agreed and signed as a true record.

56.

Declarations of interest

Guidance is available online to Councillors and co-opted members on making declarations of interest

 

Minutes:

Minute 60 Portfolio Holder Annual Report - Sustainable Homes and Communities.

Councillor Jake Bonetta, Affects Non-registerable Interest, Councillor is the Chair of Food Save, a local community organisation.

 

57.

Matters of urgency

Information on matters of urgency is available online

 

Minutes:

There were no matters of urgency.

 

The Chair requested feedback on the recent scrutiny training provided by the Centre for Governance and Scrutiny.  Members agreed that the training had been helpful and informative and that it had been very useful to refresh their knowledge.

58.

Confidential/exempt item(s)

To agree any items to be dealt with after the public (including the press) have been excluded. Thereare no itemswhich officersrecommendshould be dealtwithin thisway.

 

Minutes:

There were no confidential / exempt items.

59.

Decisions made by Cabinet called in by Members for scrutiny in accordance with the Overview and Scrutiny Procedure Rules

There are no items identified

Minutes:

There were no decisions made by Cabinet called in for scrutiny.

60.

Portfolio Holder Annual Report - Sustainable Homes and Communities pdf icon PDF 607 KB

Minutes:

Cllr Dan Ledger, Portfolio Holder for Sustainable Homes and Communities, presented his report and thanked all of the officers involved for their help in preparing the report.  Cllr Ledger advised that staff are under huge pressure with a mounting workload.

 

The report highlighted the following points:

·         A number of grants had recently been received which had meant that additional staff could be employed to provide homelessness support.

·         There is currently a large amount of casework across multiple departments trying to address homelessness.

·         Three Ukrainian families are currently in temporary accommodation and 56 families or individuals are in temporary accommodation in the district.

·         The Poverty Working Group has now moved to a policy monitoring phase.

·         A new Community Development Manager has been appointed which will assist with delivering the Housing Winter Pressures Plan.

·         With regard to strategic asset management, the housing stock condition survey and decarbonisation, the team has been very short staffed with multiple officers undertaking the role of two people due to ongoing issues with recruitment.

·         There is currently a large number of void properties and it was highlighted that the cost of turning around a void property should be around £2,500.  Recent costs have been between £6,000 - £8,000 due in part to the age of the housing stock or the way the property was treated by previous tenants.  Further work needs to be undertaken around recovery of these costs.

·         The stock condition survey will result in difficult decisions of a strategic nature, including potential disposal of ageing properties.

·         It was noted that Ian Williams contractors are increasing their workload in order to deal with current demand and this was applauded.

·         The Homes for Ukraine scheme has meant increased pressure on staff and the Portfolio Holder acknowledged the hard work that has gone into delivering the scheme.

·         Attention was drawn to the work of the Housing Task Force in increasing delivery of both affordable and social housing across the district.

 

In response to questions from Members, the following points were made:

·         With regard to the high turnover of tenants and the cost of work on void properties, the age of the stock could be contributing to the issue as tenants move to better properties.  Work was needed over the next twelve months to better understand the data and the reasons behind turnover levels.

·         Regarding retro-fitting properties, a Government grant of approx. £1.5m has been received for the first round of work, with a further funding bid having recently been submitted for work to increase energy efficiency.

·         The Portfolio Holder has met with many voluntary sector providers across the district and aims to increase networking and highlight opportunities for grant funding for the sector.

·         Officers are currently working on identifying developable housing opportunities across the district in order to increase housing stock.

·         Damp and mould issues are dealt with as soon as the Council is made aware of a problem and a damp and mould policy is shortly to be presented to the Housing Review Board.  A new contractor  ...  view the full minutes text for item 60.

61.

Quarterly Performance Report pdf icon PDF 308 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

With regard to the Quarterly Performance Report, the following points were made:

·         The Committee discussed the use of paper agendas and noted that Councillors were using both iPads and paper agendas in some meetings, which may be an unintended consequence of meeting in person and not having access to multiple screens in meetings. 

·         The high number of days lost to sickness, and in particular stress, was noted.

·         With regard to the review of compliance procedures by an external body and the lack of progress due to issues with recruitment, it was noted that the compliance procedures in question relate to matters such as fire safety and asbestos.

 

The Quarterly Performance Report was received and noted.

 

 

62.

Forward Plan pdf icon PDF 189 KB

Minutes:

It was noted that the Chair had requested an additional meeting in 2023 in order to complete the work programme and that this was proposed, and subsequently agreed to be held on 9th March 2023.  It was also noted that the April meeting would be likely to fall in the period of purdah.  The revised forward plan was tabled and agreed.

 

The Committee discussed the procedure for adding items to the Scrutiny Committee agenda and noted that the process was slow for bringing matters forward for discussion.

 

The Deputy Monitoring Officer advised that officers require clarity of what exactly the Committee is looking to scrutinise and that having more information set out by Councillors on the proposal form would enable officers to produce reports more easily, which could speed up the process.

 

The Committee discussed the example of scrutinising the use of Blackdown House post Covid as a possible future agenda item.

 

Further discussion included the Portfolio Holder reports and whether there should be greater clarity and targeting as to what the Committee is looking to consider, rather than just receive a general overview of a particular service.

 

It was noted that very few Committee members had been present at the previous meeting, and at this meeting, to hear the Portfolio Holder reports.

 

 

63.

Update on draft Training Strategy pdf icon PDF 693 KB

Minutes:

The Portfolio Holder for Democracy, Transparency and Communications presented an update on the draft Training Strategy which included the following points:

·         An update on meetings of the Member Development Working Group which had considered post-election induction training, refresher training, information for prospective Councillors and current and future training needs.

·         Key points had emerged such as Councillors needing to be aware that some Committees are statutory and require Members to be trained before sitting on the Committee eg. Licensing & Enforcement, Planning.

·         Attendance at mandatory training could be published on the Council’s website.

·         A Member training survey was circulated to all Councillors, with a response rate of 33%, although useful information was collected.

·         The benefits of ongoing refresher training needed to be made clear as legislation changes and Members need to be kept up to date.

·         Safeguarding has recently been added to the list of mandatory training and it was noted that, although requested specifically by Councillors and offered at a cost on different days and times, only just over 50% of Councillors responded to the Democratic Services Team.

·         It was suggested that attendance at mandatory training should be added as a key performance indicator on a quarterly basis and potentially published on Members’ profiles on the website in order to encourage attendance which, to date, has not been good.

·         A Member Development Plan will shortly be prepared for the forthcoming elections which will include mandatory training immediately after the election, followed by phased training due to the large volume of information for new Councillors.

·         It is difficult to plan the resource requirements for training as this depends largely on the form of delivery, whether in person or online.

·         Some training could be offered in-house such as Planning and some online.

·         The Member Development Working Group is proposing an estimated budget for training after the elections of £10,000.

 

The Portfolio Holder outlined the recommendations which would be made to Cabinet and included the following:

·         To adopt the Member Development plan which specifies the mandatory elements of training.

·         That the Code of Conduct is revised so as to recognise the mandatory training and that failure to attend would be a breach of the Code of Conduct.

·         Attendance at mandatory training would be uploaded to Members’ profiles on the website and included in the key performance indicators in the quarterly performance report.

·         It was recognised that, on occasions, Councillors may not be able to attend mandatory training and methods should be available to enable Members to catch up.

·         A budget of £10,000 be made available.

 

In response to questions from Members, the following points were made:

·         Regarding training for Councillors elected mid-term, it was noted that it was difficult to obtain the necessary knowledge, particularly where the new Member did not have the support of a political group.  It was recognised that the assistance of the Democratic Services team was invaluable and that key learning resources, such as videos and online training should be made available to new Councillors.

·         It was proposed to  ...  view the full minutes text for item 63.